Image and text provided by University of Tennessee

7-"7r4VVV,,ii 1ahEbSiccLihethtieA Carton Cnnlom.TCo document can have the authority ofCa imperial throne of China unless it bearsa. red mark placed there by the povereigu.With this seal upon it, the paper becomesofficial. The genuine Ilo-'tettcr's StomachHitters must h ive their Private Die .Stampovr the net?k of the bottle. For fifty yearsit has been the lerognized remedy for fctomarh, Hrer and kidney complaints. It wiJIcare dyspepsia, indigestion, constipation andbiliousness, also prevent malaria, ie'er andeue.modern millionaire is getting o countphilanthropy among the necessities of life,I'uck.(Muers'11niInfluence of Food,"What do you think of the theory thatfood Las a potent influence in determiningcharacter?" asked Mr. Smithfield, as he putthro lumps of sugar "in his coffee."I guess it's all right," replied Mr. Wood,as bo severed a portion of his beefsteak.lt alsrays f-eem.s a little cannibalistic to me"whtz you order lobster.""Well," retorted Mr. Smithfield, goodhn: rao roily, "I ought to have known it wasdangerous to lend you money after I discovrtvl your fondness for beets. Hut, seriously, if there were anything in the theory,wouldn't it make a man sheepish to eatmutton?""It would, and prize fighters ought torestrict themselves to a diet of scraps."1'itUburg (Jazette. 'The Dieted? and HygienicOuzette.ays: "Walter IJaker & Co., of Dorchester,ifiris., U. .S. A., have givew yea'rs of studyto the skillful preparation of cocoa andchocolate, and have devised machinery andsystems peculiar to their methods of treatment, whereby the purity, palatability, andhighest nutrient characteristics are retained. "Their preparations are known the worldover and have received the highest indorsements from the medical practitioner, thenurso, and the intelligent housekeeper andcaterer."All Tojtetlicr."Give me a room with a good fire in ft,"cried the storm-beaten traveler. ''Gee whiz!but L'zn wet.""Ves, sir." said the landlord of the wayaide inn."And, landlord, bring me a brandy andsoda, tiee whiz! but I'm dry!" Philadelphia. Press.Dest for the llowels."No matter what ails you, headache to acancer, you will never get well until yourbowels are put right. Cascarets help nature,cure you without a gripe or pain, produceeasy, natural movements, cost you just 10cents to start getting your health back.Cisr-arets Candy Cathartic, the genuine, putup in metal.Joxes, every tablet has C. (J. C.stamped on it. Beware of imitations.In Den tli Vnlley.' Tourist (on vacation, as he meets a stroller along the road) I say, you are the firstone that I have met in half an hour's valk.Is it always ss dead a3 this in this neighborhood ?Native Dead? Worse! if it wasn't for.n occasional funeral in the place vou would:not see life here from one end of the yearo the other. N. Y. Times.A Dose in Time Saves Nine of TTale'aHoney of Horehound and lar tor Colds.Pike's Toothache Drops Cure in one minute.VlZn'hv "No. I've riven up calling on3tfi Uo"xley." Jiggs "Ah!. 1 suppose herfhpr had ;i hand in that? Hirtby Weller not a hand, exactly." PhiladelphiaPress.Half an hour is all the time required todye sritk PUTNAM rAUELhaa DXlSIt is not hard to let your moderation beIcown to all men. so far as the virtues areconferred. Bain's Horn.Of course, when we" speak of tenementsbreedini; vice, we do not reler to weli-bredvir. - - 1 nek.PEiiiGESS VIROQUA, M. 0.indorses Lydia E. Piiikliain's"Vegetable Compound AfterToilowing Its Record ForA ears.' Dear Mns. Pixkiiam: Health, iaChe greatest boon bestowed on humanity and therefore anything that canrestore lost health is a blessing. -considerLydia 12. IMnkluini's VeftabIo Compound as a blessing tota.te and Nation. It cures her mothers and daughters and makes themwuil and strong,PRINCESS VTROQUA."Practicing Physician and Lecturer.For fifteen years I have noted the. -. . . . , jeffect ot your vegetaDie wmpounu inurinr special diseases of women."I know of nothing superior forovarian trouble, barrenness, and itlias prevented hundreds of dangerousoperations where physicians claimedft was the only chance to get well.Ulceration and inflammation of thevromb has been cured in two or threeweeks through its use, and as I find itpurely an herbal remedy, I unhesitatingly give it my highest endorsement.Fraternally yours, Db. P. Vikoqua,Xiansing, Mich." $5000 forfeit if above testimonial Is not genuine.If you are ill do not hesitate tojjet a bottle of Lydia E. Pinklutm's Vegetable Compound atonee, and write to Mrs. link1mm at Lynn, Mass. for specialadvice; it is entirely freeSOME GEE AT EVENTS.Dr. Talmaee Discourses on theWorld's Advancement.Sajm It Is In thv Itlslit IJJrectionI'irneiit Time V.'ouderful forUiitaster ami Wonderfulfur BlosiuK.ICopyrisht, IWi, by Iouis Kiopsch, i.j jYachington,Iu this discourse Dr. Talmage recitessome "Teat events aud shows that theworld is advancing in the right direction; ttxt, Joei i win snowwonders iu the heavens and in thetarth."Dr. Cumming great and good manwould have told us the exact tuneof the fulfillment of this prophecy.As 1 steppt d into his study in Londonol my arrival from Paris, just afterthe French had surrendered at Sedan,the good doctor said to me: "It isjust what 1 have told you about France.People laughed at me because I talkedabout the seven horns and the vials,but i foresaw all this from the bookof Daniel and the book of lievelation."Not taking any such responsibility inthe interpretation of the passage, 1imply assert that there are in it suggestions of many things in our time.Our eyes dilate and our heart quickens in its pulsations as we reau oievents in the third century, the sixthcentury, the fourteenth century, butthere were more far-reaching eventscrowded into the nineteenth centurythan into any other, and the last 20years eclipse any preceding 20. Weread in the daily newspapers of eventsannounced in one paragraph and without any special emphasis eventswhich a Herodotus, a Josephus, aXenophon, a Gibbon would have takenwhole chapters or whole volumes toelaborate. Looking out upon ourtime we must cry out, in the woras oithe text: "Wonders in the heavensand in the earth."I propose to show vou that the timein which we live is wonderful for disaster and wonderful for blessing, forthere must be lights and shades in thispicture as in all others. Need I arguethat our time is wonderful for disaster? Our world has had a rough timesince bv the hand of God it was bowledout into space. It is an epileptic earthonvulsion after convulsion; frostspounding it with sledge hammer oficeberg and fires melting it with furnaces seven times heated. It is awonder to me it has lasted so long.Meteors shooting by on this sice anagrazing it and meteors shooting byon the other side and grazing it. noneof them slow ins-up for safety. Wholefleets and navies and argosies andflotillas of worlds sweeping all about... i- , , 1 . XVus. Uur earth iiKe a nsning siiuick uhthe banks of Newfoundland, while theMajestic and the St. Paul and theKaiser Wilhelm dcr Grosse rush by.Desicies that, our world has by sin beendamaged in its internal machinery,aud ever and anon the furnaces haveburst, and the walking beams of themountains have broken, and the islands have shipped a sea, and the greathu'.k of the world has been jarred withaccidents that ever and anon havethreatened immediate demolition.Hut it seems to us as if the last hundred years were especially characterized by disaster volcanic, oceanic.epidemic. I sav volcanic because anearthquake is only a volcano hushedup. When Stromooli and Lotopaxiand Vesuvius stop breathing, let thefoundations of the earth beware!Seven thousand earthquakes in twocenturies recorded in the catalogue otthe Dritish association! Trajan, theemperor, goes to ancient -vimocu aimamid the splendors of his reception ismet by an earthquake that nearly destroys the emperor s life. Lisbon, fairand beautiful, at one o'clock on the1st of November, 1773, in six minutesC0.000 have perished, and Voltairewrites of them: "For that region itwas the last judgment, nothing wanting but a trumpet!" Europe andAmerica feeling the throb 1.500 chimneys in Boston partly or fully destroyed '.Hut the disasters of other t imes havehad their counterpart in later times.In IS 12 Caracas was caught in the gripof an earthquake, in 1SS2 in Chili 100,000 square miles of land by volcanicforce upheaved to four and seven feetof permanent elevation, in 1S54 Japanfelt the geological agony; Naplesshaken in 1S57, Mexico in 1S5S; Mendo.a. the capital of the Argentine Republic, in 1S01; Manila terrorized in1SG3; the Hawaiian islands by suchforce uplifted and let down in 1S71;Nevada shaken in 1S71, Antioch in 1S72,California in 1S72, San Salvador in 1873,while iu 1SS3 what subterranean excitement! Ischia, an island of theMediterranean, a beautiful Italian watering place, vineyard clad, surroundedby all natural charm and historicalreminiscence; yonder Capri, the summer resort of the lloman emperors;yonder Naples, the paradise of artthis beautiful island suddenly toppledinto the trough of the earth, 8,000merrymakers perishing, and some ofthem so far down beneath the reach ofhuman obsequies that it may be saidof many a one of them, as it was saidof Moses: "The Lord buried him."Italy, all Europe weeping, all Christendom weeping, where there werehearts to sympathize and Christians topray. Hut while the nations weremeasuring that magnitude of disaster,measuring it not with golden rod likethat with which the angel measuredheaven, but with the black rule ofdeath. Java, of the Indian archipelago,the most fertile island of all the earth,is catight in the grip of the earthquake,and mountain after mountain goesdown and city after city until that island, which produces the best beverage of all the world,, produced theghastliest catastrophe. One hundredthousand people dying, dead!Look at the disasters epidemic. Ispeak not of the plague in the fourthcentury that ravaged Europe and inMoscow and the Neapolitan dominions and Marseilles wrought suchterror in the eighteenth century,but I look at the yellow fevers, andthe choleras and the diphtherias andthe scarlet fevers and the typhoidsof our time. From Hurdwar, India,where every twelfth year 3,000,000devotees congregate, th caravansbrought the cholera, and that onedisease slew 18,000 in IS days in theBossorah. Twelve thousand in onesummer slain. hj it in India and 125,-fcTh,Disasters epidemic.he finest monuments inGreenwood and Laurel Hill andJicunt Auburn are to doctors nolost their lives battling with southernepidemic.JJut now I turn the leaf in my subject, and I plant the white lilies andthe palm tree amid the nightshadesand the myrtle. This age no morecharacterized y wonders of disasterthan by wonders of blessing blessingof longevity; the average of human2ife is rapidly increasing. l ortyvears now worth 400 years once. Now1 can travel from Manitoba to NewYork in, less than three day.s. Inother times it would have takenthree months. In other words, threedaj-s are now worth three months ofother daj's. The average of humanlife, practically greater now thanwhen Noah lived, with his 950 years,and Methusaleh lived his 9G9 ears.Dlessings of intelligence: The Salmon P. Chases and the Abraham Lincolns and the Henry Wilsons of thecoming time will not be required tolearn to read by pine knot lights orseated on shoemaker's bench, nor willthe Fergusons have to study astronomy while watching the cattle.Knowledge rolls its tide along everypoor man's door, and his childrenmay go down and bathe in them. Ifthe philosophers of a hundred yearsago were called upon to recite in aclass with our boys and girls thoseold philosophers would be sent downto the foot of the cla.ss because theyfailed to answer the questions! Freelibraries in all the important townsand cities of the land. Historical alcoves and poetical shelves and magazine tables for all who desire towalk through them or sit down atthem.Blessings of quick information;Newspapers falling all around usthick as leaves in a September equinoctial. News three days old rancidand stale. We see the whole worldtwice a day through the newspaperat the breakfast table and throughthe newspaper at the teatable, withan "extra" here and there between.Blessings of Gospel proclamation:Do you know that nearly all the missionary societies have been born within a hundred years and nearly all theBible societies ami nearly all thegreat philanthropic movements?Christianity is on the march, while infidelity is dwindling into imbecility.While infidelity is tius dwindling thewheel of Christianity is making abouta thousand revolutions a minute. Allthe copies of Shakespeare and of Tennyson and of Disraeli and of any tenof the most popular writers of theda3 less in number than the copies ofthe Bible going out from our printingpresses. A few years ago in sixweeks more than 2,000,000 copies ofthe New Testament purchased notgiven away, but purchased, becausethe -world will have it. Th" most popular book to-day is the Bible, and themightiest institution is the church,and the greatest name among thenations and more honored than any isthe name of Jesus.Wonders of self-sacrifice: A clergyman told me in the northwest thatfor six years he was a missionary atthe extreme north, living 400 milesfrom a postofiice, the thermometer 40degrees below zero, he slept out ofdoors in winter, wrapped in rabbitskins woven together. I said: "Is itpossible? You do not mean 40 degrees below zero?" He said: "I do.and I was happy." All for Christ!Where is there any other being thatwill rallj' such enthusiasm? Motherssewing their fingers off to educatetheir boys for the Gospel ministry.For nine years no luxury on the tableuntil the course through grammarschool and college and theologicalseminary be completed. Toor widowputting her mite into the Lord'streasury, the face of emperor or president impressed upon the coin not soconspicuous as the blood with whichshe earned it. Millions of good menand women, but more women thanmen, to whom Christ is everything.Christ first and Christ last and Christforever.Why, this age is not so characterized by invention and scientific exploration as it is by Gospel proclamation. You can get no idea of it unlessyou can ring ait tnc cnurcn oens mone chime and sound all the organs inone diapason and gather all the congregations of Christendom in one"Gloria In ExeeLsis." Mighty campmeetings! Mighty Ocean Groves!Mighty Chautauquas! Mighty conventions of Christian workers! Mightygeneral assemblies of the Presbyterian church! Mighty conferences ofthe Methodist church! Mighty associations of the Baptist church! Mightyconventions of the Episcopal church!There may be many years of hardwork yet before the consummation,but the signs are to me so encouraging that 1 would not be unbelievingif I saw the wing of the apocalypticangel spread for its last triumphantflight in this day's sunset or if tomorrow morning the ocean cablesshould thrill us with the news thatChrist the Lord had alighted onMount Olivet to proclaim universaldominion.All dead churches, wake up! Throwback the shutters of stiff ecclesiasticism and let the light of the springmorning come in! Morning for theland! Morning for the sea! Morningof light and love and upeaee! Morning of a day in which there shall beno chains to break, no sorrows to assuage, no despotism to shatter, nowoes to compassionate. BlessedChrist, descend! Scarred temple, takethe crown! Bruised hand, take thescepter! Wounded feet, step on thethrone! "Thine is the kingdom."These things I say because I wantyou to be alert. I want you to bewatching all these wonders unrollingfrom the heavens and the earth. Godhas classified them, whether calamitous or pleasing. The Divine purposesare harnessed in traces that cannotbreak and in girths that cannot slipand in buckles that cannot loosenand are driven by reins they mustanswer. I preach no fatalism. Aswarthy engineer at one of thedepots at Dakota said: "When willyou get on the locomotive and takea ride with us?" "Well," I said,"now, if that suits you." So I goton one side of the locomotive, and aMethodist minister, who was also invited, got on the other side, and between us were the engineer and thestoker. The train started. The engineer had his hand on the agitatedpulse of the great engine. Thestoker shoveled in the coal and hutthe door with a loud clang. A vastplain slipped under us, and the hillsswept by, and that great monster onwhich we rode trembed and boundedand snorted and raged as it hurledus on. I said to the Methodist minister on the other side of the locomotive: "My brother, why shouldministers quarrel about the decreesand free agency? You see thattrack, that firm track, that irontrack; that is the decree. You seethis engineer's arm; that is freeagencj. How beautifully they worktogether! They are going to take usthrough. We could not do withoutthe track, and we could not do without the engineer."So I rejoice day by day. Work forall to do, and we may turn the crankof the Christian machinery this wayor that, for we are free agents. Butthere is the track laid so long agono one remembers it laid by thehand of the Almighty God in socketsthat no terrestrial or Satanic pressure can ever affect. And along thetrack the car of the world's redemption will roll and roll to the GrandCentral depot of the millennium. 1have no anxietj' about the track. Iam onlv afraid that for our indolence and unfaithfulness God will discharge us and get some other stokerand some other engineer. The trainis going through with us or withoutus. So, my brethren, watch all theevents that are going by. If thingsseem to turn out right, give wingsto your joy. If things seem to turnout wrong, throw out the anchor offaith and hold fast.There is a house in London wherePeter the Great of Bussia livedawhile when he was moving throughthe land incognito and in workman'sdress that he might learn ship carpentry, by which he could supply theneeds of his people. A stranger wasvisiting at that house. "What's iuthat box?" The owner said: "I don'tknow. That box was there when Igot the house, and it was there whenmy father got it. We haven't hadany curiosity to look at it. I guessthere's nothing in it." "Well," saidthe stranger. "I'll give you 2 for it.""Well, done." The 2 was paid, and thecontents of that box were sold to theczar of Hussia for $50,000. In it thelathing machine of Peter the Great,his private letters and documents ofvalue beyond all monetary consideration. And here are the eventsthat seem very insignificant and unimportant, but they incase treasuresof Divine Providence and eternitiesof meaning which after awhile Godwill demonstrate before the ages asbeing of stupendous value.When Titans play quoits, they pitchmountains, but who owns these gigantic natural forces we are constantlyreading about? Whose hand is on thethrottle valveof the volcanoes? Whosefoot, suddenly planted on the footstool, makes the continents quiver?God! I must be at peace with Him.Through the Lord Jesus Christ, thisGod is mine and He is yours. I put theearthquake that shook Palestine atthe crucifixion against all the downrockings of the centuries. This Godon our side, we may challenge all thecenturies of time and all the cycles ofeternity.Those of you who are in midlife maywell thank "God that you have seen somany wondrous things, but there arepeople alive to-day who may live tosee the shimmering veil between thematerial and the spiritual world uplifted. Magnetism, a word with whichwe cover up our ignorance, will yelbe an explored realm. Electricity, thefierce courser of the sky, that Ieniamin Franklin lassoed and Morse andBell and Edison have brought undercomplete control, has greater wonders to reveal. Whether here or tieparted this life, we will see thesethings. It does not make much unierence where we stand, but the higherthe standpoint the larger flie prospectWe see them from Heaven if we donot see them from earth.Years ago I was at Fire Island,L. I., and I went up in the cupolafrom which they telegraph toNew York the approach of vesselshours before they come into portThere is an opening in the wall, andthe operator puts his telescopethrough that opening and looks outand sees vessels far out at sea. hile1 was talking with him he went upand looked out. He said: "We are ex-tip-(inr the Arizona to-nisrht." Isaid: "Is it possible you know allthose vessels? Do you know them asyou know a man's face?" He said:"Yes. I never make a mistake. Before I see the hulls I often know themby the masts. I know them all I havewatched them so long." Oh, what ao-rand tiring it is to have ships telegraphed and heralded long beforethev come to port, that friends may-come down to the wharf and welcometheir long-absent ones! So to-day wetake our stand in the watch-tower,and through the .glass of inspirationwe look off and, gee a wholefleet Of sliips coming in. That isthe ship of peace, with the starof Bethlehem floating above thetop gallants. That is the ship of thechurch, mark of salt water high uponthe smokestack, showing she has hadrough weather, but the Captain ofSalvation commands her, and all iswell with her. The ship of heaven,mightiest craft ever launched, millions of passengers waiting for millions more, prophets and apostles andmartyrs in the cabin, conquerors atthe foot of the mast, while from therigging hands are waving this way asif they knew us, and we wave backa-ain, for they are ours. They wentout from our own households. Ours!Hail, hail! Tut off the black and puton the white. Stop tolling the funeralbell and ring the wedding anthem.Shut up the hearse and take thechariot.Now the ship comes around thereat headland. Soon she will strikeThe wharf and we will go aboard her.Tears for ships going out. Laughterfor ships coming in. Now she touchesthe wharf. Throw out the planks.Block not up that gangway -with embracing long lost friends, for you willhave eternity of reunion. Stand backand give way until other millionscome aboard her. Farewell to sin!Farewell to struggle! Farewell tosickness! Farewell to death! "Blessedare all they who enter ia through thegates into the city."iis., :.: .mm I a isi ri---T .-is j , ml(All F0flALoMisville,Ky. Mew York, MMfor So.lc by aJJ druit Price fifty cervix per bottle.PRICE, 25 c.Her Circulating: Medium."She's a very cautious woman. Especially about gossip. No woman ever beard herretail any scandal."But I am told that stories confided toher in secrecy do pet out somehow.""Yes. I know. Vou see. she tells them allto her husband." Cleveland Plain Dealer.Hoped They Would Ran Their Coarse.Mrs.' Vernon Brown Why on earth don'tyou get your nusuana to cut on nis wniskers? Mrs. Smifiian Jones I wouldn t have himdo it for the world. I want him to let themgror ana et tnem an out oi nis 6j siem.btray Stories.In the millennium, of course, a womanwill be only as old as she thinks she looks.Town Topics.THE GENERAL MARKETS.Kansas City, Dc. 7.CATTLE Eeef steers $4 60 (i 6Native stockers 3 00 (a 4"Western steers 2 S5 (a 5HOGS 4 40 (it 6SHEEP 3 00 (si 3WHEAT Xo. 2 hard "oZNo. 2 redCORN No. 2 mixed C0WOATS No. 2 mixed1540DO7576S2704!)65RYE No. 2FI-Ol'R Hard wh't patents. 3 45Soft wheat patents 3 50HAY Timothy 9 00Prairie 7 003 753 75(ft 13 50It 14 001 09BRAN SackedBUTTER Choice to fancy.. 14221021CHEESE Full creamEGGSPOTATOES Western 95 1ST. LOUIS.00CATTLE Native steers 3 50Texas and Indian steers 3 50HOGS Packers 5 95SHEEP Native 3 20FLOUR Winter patent3 .... 3 75So10669090S46949WHEAT No. 2 red SICORN No. 2OATS No. 2RYEBUTTER DairyPRY SALT MEATS66"8ti4867V4158 509 37V(fi 20Hi S 75BACON .....'(J 9 62'.CHICAGO.CATTLE Steers 4 00?T 8tv 6di 4(ft, 3HOGS Mixed and butchers. 5 75SHEEP Western 3 00FLOUR Winter patents 3 60350070Sl6661WHEAT No. 2 red 79CORN No. 2OATS No. 2 46RYE DecemberLARD DecemberPORK December15 55NEW YORKCATTLE Steers 110 06 25HOGS 6 15(. 6 20SHEEP 2 00 PWHEAT No. 2 red S3i8CORN No. 2 72-V3)OATS No. 23 2586V473U51 'ATH CKNTAVK COtJnV,Th8 JJ L2V,fsJvm0f Lmxt''The Sale Annually ofMillions of Dottlesof Syrup of Figs and the universal satisfactionwhich it has given attest the fact that it possessesthe qualities which commend it to public favor.With the diffusion of knowledge of what a laxativeshould be and a general understanding of the factthat it should have a truly laxative and beneficialeffect and be wholly free from every objectionablequality, or substance, the large and growing dedemand forSyrup of Figsshows that it is destined to supplant the old-timecathartiqs which were generally injurious andusually disagreeable as well. In Syrup of Figs onefinds a true laxative, simple and pleasant to thetaste, gentle in its action and beneficial in effect.In the process of manufacture figs are used asthey are pleasant to the taste, but the medicinalvirtues of Syrup of Figs are obtained from anexcellent combination of plants known to bemedicinally laxative and to act most beneficially.In orderXo Get Its Beneficial EffectBuy the Genuine Manufactured by theFor More Than s Qaarter or Century the reputation of W. L.Donxlas S3.G0 and shoes lor st jle, comfort and wear has excelled all othermakes sold at tlu'SA prices. This excellent reputation has been won by meritalone. V. I.. DoiikIs shoes liava to cive belter satisfaction than other Sa.OOandJ-i.to ehof s because his repuiauon lor the best $3.U0 aud &J.C0 shoes luust boluain tam?d.JSoiJ bu C3 Douglas Stores in Ameriran cities selling direct from factory tou:arer at one projit; and bat shoe dealers everyuiitre.WL12 a:UNION-MADE. The standard has awsys been placed so high that the wearer receives more value for his moneyin the W I Douglas $s.o and 8-1.50 shoes than he can get elsewhere, V. L. IkmKlas makes and tellsfu. .mju fiMv auues tuna any oiner iwo manuuciiucn ui wo nwu.. m ww vn.inw. I- Douglas S13.OO and 83.50 shoeslearners used In S5.00 and SG.OO shoes andInsist upon havlnir TV. I. Doujrlas shoeson bottom. Shoes sent anywhere on receipt ofi ais measurements ot loot as snown :wiatn usually worn : plain or cap toe: heavy, medium or light soles.CATALOG FREE.W. I. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass.Had Him There."How crazy you women act over the'Woman's page! said Mr. Pozenby, in atone of withering sarcasm. "I wonder whythe papers don't have a "Man's page,' too?""1 hey do," Mrs. Pozenby replied."I've never seen one.""Oh, yes, you have. It's the page devotedto prize fighting and horse racing and otheroccupations of that sort." Youth's Companion. Persons contemplating a journey East orWest should be ca:n t hat the rates paidfor their transportuu;.:i not exceed thosecharged by the Nickel i r. e Road.11ns company alv.-avs oiters lowest ratesand the service is efficient. Careful attention is given to the wants of all firstand second class passengers by uniformedcolored attendants. The dining car serviceof the Nickel Plate Road is above criticismand enables the traveler to obtain mealsat from thirty-live (35) cents to $1.00 butno higher.The Pullman service is the usual highgrade standard. Semi-weekly transcontinental tourist cars ply between Atlanticand Pacitic Coasts. Confer with nearestBgent of the Nickel Plate Road.To Suit the Cone.Jake Cora has an aquiline nose, hasn'the?Fake How could T know? She alwaysturns it up at me. Harlem Life.Travelers Cull It Blessed.Of all the blessings that a railroad company can confer upou a long-suffering public, hone is greater than smokeless coal. TheLackawanna Railroad burns it! for whichall travelers call that road blessed. Nosmoke! no dust. Its policy may well inspirethe gratitude and patronage of a gratefulaud appreciative public. Outing.A Cliansre of Base.Yeast I see i Philadelphia composer haswritten a quickstep.Crimsonbeak Yes, and I hear they areusing it in Chicago for a funeral march.Yonkers Statesman.frso's Cure for Consumption is an infallible medicine for coughs and coidsN. W.Samuel. Ocean Grove. N.J, Feb. 17, 1900.Then He Gets Xolay.Mrs. Biggs Your husband isn't much for6how. He always dresses very quietly.Mrs. Diggs Huh! You ought to hear himsometimes when his collar button rolls under the dresser. Chicago Daily News.Stop ? Conarh and WorkiOff the Cold.Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. Price 25cThe change from a job to a situation isnot always appreciated by the incumbent;as, for instance, when a political job becomes an embarrassing situation. Puck.ForOver Thirty YearsThe Kind You Have Always Bough!TT HOBnAT THSCT, W TO CITf.For Infants and Children Jjrlv' -I If 1W. L. DOUGLAS64.00 Gilt EdsreLine Cannot BeEqualed at Any Price.are made of the same high-gradeare Just as pood in every way.with name and priceprice and S5 cents additional forstate sty le aesirau, mxm ouuC UN POWDERREADERS OF TH18 PAPBIlDESIRING TO BUY ASYTHINOADVERTISED IN ITS COLUMNSSHOULD INSIST UPOS HAVISOWHAT THEY ASK FOB. REFUS1XOALL SUBSTITUTES OB IMITATIONS.ANAKESIS'tU:lief and POSITIVELTCl'KM FILES.lrr f ree Bitruple adlreta"ASAKESIS,-' Trltuno buildiuK iew York.READY ROOFINGAnj-bodr wlt6n pamroer a sput iron.Two-ply complete. 100 square feel, 81-Three-ply " WO " " a'40 Seeoad Street, - il EM 111 IN, T)XnnODOV NEW DISCOVERY; ftmI VJ I C oulck relief and carea wormcases. Book of teMlmoniala and lO 7"'it.'v?rie??Free. Br. H. H. BOSS, Bax 1, ATLANTA. faA.itULIFORMA HOSES." Swrt torn.- Wfr, WfcHty BoBtcaaei7, 4 martatsu, i inj.ati.ovw, a.A. N. K.-F1893ygfXLES WBITHO TO ADTIBTISEBI7 .lejaae itJtte that 7u mw the .Advertl?avMr lisRnat Conata SrrnD. Taaies Good. CfIn time. Sold by Gravwirtt.64.00 Gilt Edsre LlstampedfVivl 1 1y$&S& Profitable fruit ijSfcggSS growing insured only ;vrhen enough actualIS s n tie fertilizer.h Neither quantity norf f&f&S good quality possibleffe without Potash.Write for our fret books "yTp-yTOy giving details. ;3 GERMAN KALI WORKS, i4 ? V'TO SeaNKr" A "di Jt QUICKER THE POWDER, ,F ITHE OKEATER TfEED FORmt 1 HEAVY WADDING BEHIXDi iTHE SHOT. USE Hazard8mok.elea. THEN OS RE- :f SjTL"RSi'0 FROM A HUNT.: ljYOU WILL HAVK GAiTES B INSTEAD OF EXCrSES 10J'' ' ivLi"1VI